Archive - May 2011 - Story
May 26th
Albert Edwards... In A Slightly Different Light
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 09:53 -0500Yesterday, the latest set of downbeat musings by SocGen's Albert Edwards made the pages of Zero Hedge (incidentally, the market is starting to appreciate that he was once again correct: deflation, then whoosh). Today, we present Albert Edwards in a slightly different, and even more subdued, light.
Gleacher On The 10 Year's 2% Handle, QE6, And How The US Treasury Wins Again And Everyone Else Loses
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 09:30 -0500Gleacher's co-head of rates Russ Certo asks: "Who needed to buy $112 billion 5 years near new range break out low yield prints? And who would pay 1.7 bps through in order to do so? I think it is obvious that there is "official" demand in the form of central banks and official institutions, pensions, excess reserve banking entities recirculating monies and the like. I feel goosed. Seems like we are on QE6, they just didn't tell you that it started. And we have seen this before." He sadly concludes that this forced Fed intervention to keep rates low means the bottom is about to fall out: "Maybe, the severity of the litany of unintended consequences of this low rate coordinated policy which is penalizing savers, reducing income based consumption, creating more leverage and robbing economic fundamentals from the future and the like, are more beneficial than the alternative of stakeholders perceptions how bad banking balance sheets are. Maybe, if you don't have sound financial institutions (or the perceptions of such) or sovereignties, both of which need a function of time, lower rates, higher net interest margin, to work their way out of insolvency, then all this is worth it. Maybe, solvency conditions of banks explain this seemingly confusing relentless easings of policy. No sound banking system, nothing sound."
Euro Drops Following Juncker Statement IMF May Not Release Next Greek Tranche
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 09:02 -0500And some more headlines:
- EU's Juncker says IMF may not release tranche for Greece next month
- EU's Juncker says IMF needs 12-month Greek refinancing guarantee
- EU's Juncker says governments unable to make up IMF portion
Elsewhere, Greece is already planning its upcoming series of 24 hour strikes which will make sure that Greek budget deficits continue to demonstrate that only the US is worse than the Mediterranean country when it comes to balancing its books.
IMF Makes Headlines Again
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 08:58 -0500Only this time not with its handling of luxury hotel staff, but with its assessment of "reality":
IMF's Blanchard says inflation is a non issue for US economy
And these are the people who continue to pretend they have any relevance? Just get done with your theatrical conclave already and phase out into irrelevance already. Luckily, the "real" IMF, China, is always in the background, willing to purchase, er, bailout any (read all) European states that need a bailout.
And The US Banks Managing The Libyan Sovereign Wealth Fund Were...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 08:47 -0500"Goldman Sachs and HSBC together held $335 million of the Libyan oil fund's assets, while Societe Generale held $1 billion in structured products for the fund, Global Witness said on Thursday." Thank you Reuters for confirming that a crazy conspiracy blog (although with 3MM/mo uniques that may need redefinition) occasionally ends up being proven right. Of course, there is nothing wrong with that. Oh wait, there is. Perhaps it is time to inquire not only into Goldman's alleged perjury (Your honor, St.OMO is not the Discount Window, we swear), but also into the firm's (don't laugh) anti-money laundering "rules" (a topic also discussed here).
Stone McCarthy On The GDP Print: "The FOMC's Growth Forecast Now Appears A Bit Optimistic"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 08:16 -0500Before we move on from today's atrocious GDP number, we are presenting the one firm whose macroeconomic opinion we truly respect: Stone McCarthy, and yes we will make an exception for Goldman's comments because we are delighted to recall how Jan Hatzius predicted a new golden age for the US economy as recently as December 1 (read at: "Goldman Jumps Shark, "Fundamentally" Shifts Its "Bearish" Outlook On Economy: Goes Bullish, Hikes Outlook"). Because every documented incident of failed "shark jumping" deserves the proper amount of gloating.
"Like A Balloon"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 08:05 -0500Because we all need a laugh after the latest confirmation that the Fed has completely failed at restoring economic growth. Incidentally this anecdote also explains why the S&P doubled in the last two years.
GDP Second Revision At 1.8% On Expectations Of 2.2%, Sub 1% Ex-Inventory Build; Initial Claims Surge To 424K
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 07:32 -0500
Contrary to expectations by the endlessly wrong Wall Street crew, the second revision of Q1 GDP came not as expected at 2.2% (up from 1.8% in the first estimate), but far, far lower at 1.8%. And while the number is largely irrelevant for the future and even current economy, it shows that the contraction is far more pronounced. More troubling is the shift in various GDP components contributing to the number: the biggest delta was Personal Consumption Expenditures which missed by a whopping 21%, plunging from 2.7% to 2.2%, on expectations of a rise to 2.8%. As a result as the chart below shows, the "growth" in Q1 was based on even shakier grounds: the contribution from PCE plunged from 1.91% to 1.16%, with Fixed Investment plunging from 0.93% to 0.26%. The plug: why old faithful of course - Inventories, which "added" 1.19% to growth, up from 0.09% in the first revision. Ex the now traditional inventory build, Q1 GDP growth was sub 1%. Which means that once the inevitable liquidations commence, the US will go into all out contraction. And confirming the keyword of 2011 "stagflation" is now firmly entrenched, was the BLS advising us that initial claims surged from 404K to 424K. So much for no QE3. Next up, as we have said ever since January, Jan Hatzius and Bill Dudley start having tete-a-tetes. Everyone knows what follows...
Frontrunning: May 26
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 07:27 -0500- Merkel-Sarkozy Bond Frays Heading Into Deauville G-8 (Bloomberg)
- China's Cabinet May Impose Temporary Price Controls to Counter Inflation (Bloomberg)
- No Retreat on Medicare (WSJ)
- Goldman Sachs Needs a New Audit Committee (Bloomberg)
- Republicans to roll out new tax-cut proposal (MarketWatch)
- GATA urges Paul to probe Fed's gold swaps; he tells CNBC he will (GATA)
- Civil war looms as dozens killed in Yemen capital (Reuters)
- Foreclosure Drop in Florida and California Do Not Show Recovery (ForeclosureWarehouse)
The Fed Does It Again: $80 Billion Secretive "Bank Subsidy" Program Uncovered, Providing Bank Loans At 0.01% Interest
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 07:11 -0500The Fed does it again. Following consistent allegations that the Federal Reserve operates in an opaque world, whose each and every action has only had a purpose of serving its Wall Street masters, led to repeated lawsuits which went so far as to get the Chairsatan to promise he would be more transparent, Bloomberg's Bob Ivry breaks news that between March and December 2008 the Fed operated a previously undisclosed lending program, whose terms were nothing short of a subsidy to banks. Says Ivry: "The $80 billion initiative, called single-tranche open- market
operations, or ST OMO, made 28-day loans from March through December
2008, a period in which confidence in global credit markets collapsed
after the Sept. 15 bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. Units of 20 banks were required to bid at auctions for the cash. They
paid interest rates as low as 0.01 percent that December, when the Fed’s
main lending facility charged 0.5 percent." 0.01% interest is also known by one other name: "outright subsidy." It doesn't get any freer than that: 0.01% interest on one month cash. Just how close to a complete implosion was the financial system if 0.5% interest seemed too high? Not surprisingly, this program was widely used: "Credit Suisse Group AG, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc each borrowed at least $30 billion in 2008 from a Federal Reserve emergency lending program whose details weren’t revealed to shareholders, members of Congress or the public...Goldman Sachs, led by Chief Executive Officer Lloyd C. Blankfein,
tapped the program most in December 2008, when data on the New York Fed
website show the loans were least expensive. The lowest winning
bid at an ST OMO auction declined to 0.01 percent on Dec. 30, 2008, New
York Fed data show. At the time, the rate charged at the discount
window was 0.5 percent." Yes, that Goldman Sachs. The same one that perjured itself when it said before the FCIC that it only used de minimis emergency borrowings. Just how many more top secret taxpayer subsidies will emerge were being used by the Fed to keep the kleptocratic status quo in charge?
Today's Economic Data Docket - Second GDP Estimate And Initial Claims
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 06:40 -0500Today we get the second estimate of Q1 GDP and jobless claims for last week. Somehow a claims number over 400,000 is once again considered a good thing. Elsewhere the Fed buys $5-7 billion in 05/31/2015-11/15/2016 bonds, even as the Treasury gets even deeper into net debt ceiling breach courtesy of the last bond in the scheduled series this week which saw total US marketable debt increase by $110 billion gross and $49 billion net.
Goldman Sachs Cuts S&P Target From 1,500 To 1,450
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 06:25 -0500A month ago, when Goldman, just as we predicted, cut its GDP outlook for Q1 (to be followed by downgrades to both H2 and Q2) we said: "Some other things nobody will be able to predict: Hatzius dropping full
year GDP from 4% to 2.25%; Goldman's downgrade of precious metals,
Kostin's 2011 S&P 500 price target reduction by 20%, and Goldman
getting its New York Fed branch to commence monetizing $1.5 trillion in
debt some time in October." One by one all of the predictions are starting to come true: this morning Goldman head market strategist just cut his S&P 500 outlook from 1,500 to 1,450 (granted it is not 20%...yet. There is, however, over 7 more months left in the year). In the meantime, look for the thunderous Wall Street lemmings herd to do the same. Just as we have been predicting on both. Time for CNBC to trot out Laszlo Ultrasound and to advise him to angle the predictive instrument known as a ruler a littler lower: the S&P 2,854 call in 2 years suddenly appears in jeopardy (absent QE7 of course).
Cost to Insure U.S. “Ponzi Scheme” Against Default Rises Sharply
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/26/2011 06:08 -0500
Gold and silver are lower today with profit taking, Chinese bond buying and increased risk appetite being cited for the price falls. Reports of China buying Eurozone government debt may have led to a rise in the euro and equities. However, the scale of sovereign debt risk internationally is such that even significant and ongoing Chinese buying would be unlikely to contain the crisis. While most of the focus has been on Greece and Eurozone sovereign debt issues, the not insignificant risk posed by a U.S. sovereign debt crisis increases by the day. The risk of a US default continues to rise which can be seen in the sharply increased cost to insure U.S. sovereign debt. The squabbling between Democrats and Republicans last week as the U.S. debt ceiling of $14.3 trillion was being reached did not help sentiment towards U.S. debt. Nor did former Soros’ partner Stanley Druckenmiller, the billionaire former-hedge fund manager and legendary investor, comment in the Wall Street Journal that the Federal Reserve’s bond purchases are a fraud and a “Ponzi scheme”. He advocated a U.S. default or a technical default, saying “"technical default would be horrible, but I don't think it's going to be the end of the world. It's not going to be catastrophic."
RANsquawk European Morning Briefing - Stocks, Bonds, FX etc. – 26/04/11
Submitted by RANSquawk Video on 05/26/2011 05:22 -0500A snapshot of the European Morning Briefing covering Stocks, Bonds, FX, etc.
Market Recaps to help improve your Trading and Global knowledge
May 25th
California AG Launches Criminal Inquiry Into Schwarzenegger's Misuse Of Taxpayer Funds To Cover Up Affair
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 05/25/2011 22:32 -0500And just as Wednesday appeared it would be (mostly) surreal news free. Radar online has just broken that "The Californian Attorney General will conduct what’s being termed an “inquiry” into former Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger’s alleged misuse of tax payer funds to cover up sexual liaisons. In a bombshell exclusive, RadarOnline.com has learned the Office of the Attorney General, a branch of the Department of Justice, is conducting a preliminary evaluation into the scope of Schwarzenegger’s double life, which allegedly included using his state-funded security details to cover up women being escorted into his hotel room." That's good news: following the earlier S&P report that massive state debt overhang is not really helping economic growth, the funds saved from not buying hooker hoodies will go straight to the state's already broke educational, infrastructure and every other system.



